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Mixed Hereditament - Law Dictionary Search Results

Home Dictionary Name: mixed hereditament

Mixed hereditament

Mixed hereditament, means a hereditament which is not a domestic hereditament but in respect of which it appears to the rating authority or is determined that the proportion of the rateable value of the hereditament attributable to the part of the hereditament used for the purposes of a private dwelling or private dwellings is greater than one-eight. Any part of the hereditament used for the letting of rooms singly for residential purposes, whether by way of tenancy or licence and with or without board or other services or facilities, or used as sites for movable dwellings, is to be treated as used for purposes other than those of a private dwelling or private dwellings, Halsbury's Laws of England, 4th Edn., Vol. 39, para 192, at p. 169....


Hereditaments

Hereditaments, every kind of property that can be inherited; i.e., not only property which a person has by descent from his ancestors, but also that which he has by purchase, because his heir can inherit it from him. The two kinds of hereditaments are corporeal, which are tangible (in fact, they mean the same thing as land), and incorporeal, which are not tangible, and are the rights and profits annexed to, or issuing out of, land. It includes money held in trust to be laid out in land [Re Gosselin, (1906) 1 Ch 120].Any property that can be inherited; anything that passes by intestacy, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn., p. 730.The enumeration of incorporeal hereditaments in Hale's Analysis (p. 48) is the following:-Rents, services, tithes, commons, and other profits in alieno solo, pensions, offices, franchises, liberties, villains, dignities. But Blackstone enumerates ten principal kinds:-Advowsons, tithes, commons, ways, offices, dignities, franchises, corodies or pensions, annuities,...


Hereditament

Any species of property that may be inherited lands tenements anything corporeal or incorporeal real personal or mixed that may descend to an heir...


Incorporeal hereditament

Incorporeal hereditament. See HEREDITAMENT...


hereditament

hereditament [Medieval Latin hereditamentum, from Late Latin hereditare to inherit, from Latin hered- heres heir] : inheritable property ...


Corporeal hereditaments

Corporeal hereditaments, those subjects of tangible property which are comprised under the denomination of things real, Fearne, Reading on the Statute of Inrolments....


Major hereditas venit uncuique nostrum a jure et legibus quam a parentibus

Major hereditas venit uncuique nostrum a jure et legibus quam a parentibus [Lat.], a greater inheritance comes to every one of us from right and the laws than from parents....


Mix

To cause a promiscuous interpenetration of the parts of as of two or more substances with each other or of one substance with others to unite or blend into one mass or compound as by stirring together to mingle to blend as to mix flour and salt to mix wines...


Mixed

Formed by mixing united mingled blended See Mix v t amp i...


Question of fact, mixed question of law and fact

Question of fact, mixed question of law and fact, In the determination of question of fact no application of any principle of law is required in finding either the basic facts or arriving to the ultimate con-clusion, in a mixed question of law and fact the ultimate conclusion has to be drawn by applying principles of law to basic findings, Meenakshi Mills, Madurai v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Mardas, AIR 1957 SC 49 followed Krishnawati v. Hans Raj, (1974) 1 SCC 289: AIR 1974 SC 280....


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